ObamaCare: Concrete Benefits and Abstract Specifics
The concrete, which is definitely concrete, and the abstract, which is not so abstract.
Anonymous
I cannot help but notice that ObamaCare supporters are on the offense. They are urging Democrats to stress the
concrete benefits of the health law and ignore the abstract specifics of the law( See
Eugene Robinson, “Democrats Should Play Offense
on ObamaCare,” Washington Post,
March 18; Robert Shrum, “Democrats Must Run on ObamaCare,” Daily Beast, March 17).
Concrete Benefits
Concrete Benefits
Concrete benefits include:
·
Coverage
for pre-existing conditions
·
Coverage of young adults under parents’ plans
·
Removal of caps on life-time health spending
·
Certain Obama changes - postponing employer mandate, exclusion of some cancellations , and so forth – to soften
impact of ObamaCare.
Shrum claims Republicans
are running on an “abstraction”, that ObamaCare is bad in the abstract simply because it comes from Republicans who
oppose ObamaCare on ideological grounds.
Abstract Specifics
Abstract Specifics
Counters Grace-Marie Turner:
An abstraction?! What is abstract about 2,800 pages of
legislation and at least 25,000 pages of regulations? What’s abstract about
nearly 6 million people losing the health coverage they liked and being forced
into the ObamaCare exchanges where health insurance is more expensive,
deductibles are sky-high, and networks are limited to a short list of doctors
and hospitals? And what is abstract about citizens paying potentially thousands
of dollars in fines for not complying with the law’s individual mandate?
Keeping Concrete Benefits
Keeping Concrete Benefits
The problem with the Democratic attack strategy is that Republicans agree with the Democrats on keeping concrete benefits.
These positive benefits should be preserved. Indeed, retention of these benefits is part of the alternative Republican replacement plan
put forth by Republican Senators – Hatch of Utah, Coburn of Oklahoma, and Burr of North
Carolina (See Grace-Marie Turner, “How Can Democrats Run on ObamaCare?”
National Review Online, March 17).
And so the arguments go back and forth on ObamaCare. On the law's concrete benefits, it’s hard to argue when you fundamentally
agree. On abstract specifics, there are concrete issues on which to disagree.
Tweet: Democrats
and Republicans agree that certain concrete benefits of ObamaCare should be
preserved.
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